The IHRA antisemitism definition chills debate without protecting Jews
The effective ban on any form of anti-Zionism or harsh criticism of Israel has had a detrimental impact on my life and career progression, says Clive Gabay
The effective ban on any form of anti-Zionism or harsh criticism of Israel has had a detrimental impact on my life and career progression, says Clive Gabay
Watchdog expresses concern as employers increasingly look for higher degrees
With concerns about AI writing applications and the ongoing fall-out from the end of affirmative action, some?institutions are seeking to get to know potential students better by inviting them to...
UK and US?might have benefited from significant drop in travel to Australia and New Zealand, according to?Education at a Glance
English regulator?expresses concern about staffing levels and academic misconduct protections on business and management courses
University of Southern Queensland head makes case for teaching students in remote towns regionally to keep them and their skills in the community
Some fear anti-Anglicisation politician will stick to hard line if he wins big, but even milder consensus to limit non-Dutch teaching to a third of each programme would bring major disruption to many...
Editors claim voices of victims are being silenced as future of Routledge book on harassment in academia left in doubt
Allocate funds, don’t allocate funds, not now, not forever: accord’s spikiest idea elicits multiple perspectives
Union members say tight deadlines?not achievable as boycott ends as universities push to allow students to graduate
Researchers sceptical about local government’s plan to open new institution as a means of stopping brain drain
Business development should be left to the schools and faculties that house the researchers and students whose ideas drive innovation, says Ben Clark
Scholars say it’s impossible to tell whether government motivated by ‘genuine concerns’ or censorship aims
‘New Conservatives’ say young people ‘do?not have the right to study Mickey Mouse courses at the taxpayer’s expense’
Australian sector denies accusations of inadequate support, but says it can never do ‘enough’